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Erinaceusyllis ettiennei San Martín 2005

Erinaceusyllis ettiennei

provided by wikipedia EN

Erinaceusyllis ettiennei is a species belonging to the phylum Annelida, a group known as the segmented worms.[1] E. ettiennei is characterized by its compound chaetae with slender and thin blades, which are curved as a sabre. The most similar species is Erinaceusyllis serratosetosa, but is differentiated by the size of its body and the compound chaetae, which have long and curved marginal spines on its long blades in E. serratosetosa. The species is named in honour of Ettienne Fourie.[1]

Description

The species' body is minute, with a total length of 1.2 millimetres (0.047 in) and width of 0.15 millimetres (0.0059 in), including about 19 to 22 chaetigers, covered with small papillae. Its prostomium is oval, showing 4 large eyes in a trapezoidal arrangement, as well as 2 anterior eyespots. Its antennae have bulbous bases and short tips, its median antenna about the same length as the prostomium and palps put together. The palps are similar in length to the prostomium, being fused along their length, and containing a distal notch.[1]

Its peristomium is similar to the segments that succeed it, being somewhat bilobed. Its tentacular cirri and antennae are alike, but smaller, the dorsal cirri shorter than the antennae but longer than the former, being absent on chaetiger 2.[1]

It shows slender and unidentate blades within heteromorphic compound chaetae, the longer blades provided with thin spines. Its parapodia count with 2 compound chaetae each, with a long blade on its midbody measuring about 48-53µm, while another 6 are provided with sabre-like blades. Erinaceusyllis ettiennei shows simple, dorsal chaetae from midbody, unidentate and smooth; its ventral simple chaetae being slender and present on the posterior parapodia. Its acicula is solitary and acuminate, with tiny subdistal spines present.[1]

The pharynx is long and slender, spanning 4 segments. Its pharyngeal tooth is small and is located near the opening of the pharynx, without papillae on its anterior rim. Its proventricle is barrel-shaped, long and wide (spanning 4 segments), with about 22 muscle cell rows. Its pygidium is small, with 2 anal cirri, similar to its dorsal cirri but rather longer, plus a median papilla.[1]

Distribution

Erinaceusyllis ettiennei was first isolated (at a depth of 5 metres (16 ft)) from mud in shallow water in Halifax Bay, north of Townsville, Queensland, and is thought to inhabit an extended area in Queensland.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g San Martín, G (2005). "Exogoninae (Polychaeta: Syllidae) from Australia with the description of a new genus and twenty-two new species". Records of the Australian Museum. 57 (1): 39–152. doi:10.3853/j.0067-1975.57.2005.1438. page(s): 55-57, figs. 11A-G, 12A-E.
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Erinaceusyllis ettiennei: Brief Summary

provided by wikipedia EN

Erinaceusyllis ettiennei is a species belonging to the phylum Annelida, a group known as the segmented worms. E. ettiennei is characterized by its compound chaetae with slender and thin blades, which are curved as a sabre. The most similar species is Erinaceusyllis serratosetosa, but is differentiated by the size of its body and the compound chaetae, which have long and curved marginal spines on its long blades in E. serratosetosa. The species is named in honour of Ettienne Fourie.

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Depth range

provided by World Register of Marine Species
Intertidal to 5 m.

Reference

6. BirdLife International (May, 2009) http://www.birdlife.org/datazone/species/index.html?action=SpcHTMDetails.asp&sid=2154&m=0

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WoRMS Editorial Board
contributor
João Gil [email]

Distribution

provided by World Register of Marine Species
Australia (Queensland).

Reference

6. BirdLife International (May, 2009) http://www.birdlife.org/datazone/species/index.html?action=SpcHTMDetails.asp&sid=2154&m=0

license
cc-by-4.0
copyright
WoRMS Editorial Board
contributor
João Gil [email]

Habitat

provided by World Register of Marine Species
Mud on shallow water.

Reference

6. BirdLife International (May, 2009) http://www.birdlife.org/datazone/species/index.html?action=SpcHTMDetails.asp&sid=2154&m=0

license
cc-by-4.0
copyright
WoRMS Editorial Board
contributor
João Gil [email]